Cardiac tamponade due to post–cardiac injury syndrome in a patient with severe haemophilia A and HIV-1 infection |
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Authors: | Theodossiades,Tsevrenis,Bellia,Avgeropoulou,Nomikos,& Kontopoulou-Griva |
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Affiliation: | First Regional Transfusion and Haemophilia Centre, Hippokration Hospital, Athens, Greece. blood@hellassnet.gr |
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Abstract: | An 18-year-old man with severe haemophilia A (FVIII:C < 1%) and human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) infection was admitted to the hospital with fever and chest pain for 7 days. Eight weeks prior to his admission he had an accident for which he underwent, at another hospital, clinical and laboratory examination that revealed bone fractures of the nose cavity, and he was given factor VIII concentrates for seven days due to nasal bleeding. On admission, chest roentgenogram showed a large cardiac silhouette and echocardiography confirmed the presence of a large quantity of pericardial fluid. A presumptive diagnosis of the post-cardiac injury syndrome was made and he was given anti-inflammatory drugs plus infusion of recombinant factor VIII concentrate (35 units kg-1 b.i.d.). On the seventh day he exhibited cardiac tamponade for which he underwent subxiphoid pericardiotomy with drainage of approximately 1500 mL of bloody exudate. He had an uncomplicated recovery and 10 days later he left hospital. He was given a continuous prophylactic treatment of 15 units kg-1 of recombinant FVIII every 2 days for 6 months, and 30 months after this episode the patient is free of any symptom. |
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Keywords: | cardiac tamponade haemophilia HIV-1 infection post–cardiac injury syndrome |
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